As Hip(p) as Auer?

Power and gender dynamics in German and Austrian jazz history

Authors

  • Magdalena Fuernkranz University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.24717

Keywords:

jazz, gender, power, Germany, Austria, female instrumentalists, historiography

Abstract

The vibraphonist Vera Auer (1919–1996) and the pianist Jutta Hipp (1925–2003) are known as the ‘first female European jazz musicians’. Both were born in German speaking countries and came in contact with jazz in the 1940s. These instrumentalists had the courage to try out new approaches and develop their own musical ideas early in their careers in jazz scenes shaped by androcentric dynamics. Forms of subversion of gendered assignments are to be seen and heard in Auer’s and Hipp’s performances and influenced a new generation of jazz musicians in recent years. This article discusses the biographies and works of Vera Auer and Jutta Hipp by 
exploring how these women known as ‘female exception[s]’ built their careers, with a critical eye on power and gender dynamics in German and Austrian jazz scenes. I argue that by subverting various gendered stereotypes such as the trope of the competitive individual jazz soloist, the supportive, caring, egalitarian aesthetic of both Hipp and Auer was coded feminine and therefore ignored in jazz history as a result of patriarchal structures in jazz.

Author Biography

  • Magdalena Fuernkranz, University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna

    Magdalena Fuernkranz is a postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Popular Music at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna. As co-leader of the project ‘Performing Diversity’ and leader of the project ‘Female Jazz Musicians in Austria’, her recent research has focused on performativity, gender and intersectionality in pop and rock music, Austrian music scenes, and gender/identity in jazz.

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Published

2024-03-04

How to Cite

Fuernkranz, M. (2024). As Hip(p) as Auer? Power and gender dynamics in German and Austrian jazz history. Popular Music History, 15(2-3), 173–195. https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.24717